“What Is Something Your Parents Ingrained In You That Is Ridiculous?” (80 Answers)

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Needless to say, many things we do as kids—as grown-ups later in life, even—come from our upbringing and the things our parents instill in us. And while most of them typically try their best at being parents, some of their values or beliefs might be questionable at best.

For instance, telling your child that perfectionism should always be the standard might not be a healthy approach, nor arguably is encouraging them to work day, night, and weekends to show their dedication. These are just a couple of examples millennials shared while discussing the things their parents ingrained in them that they later realized were ridiculous. Scroll down to find more on the list below and see just what bizarre beliefs some parents want their children to follow.

#1

Hmm… The sort of “Sanctity” of family. Like, just because you are blood related, you somehow need to bend over backwards for them. Don’t get me wrong, I love my family and that includes the ones I don’t see often. That said, some of them are total pricks.. And I would bend over backwards for people I work with that are kind long before I would them. You don’t get a pass just because we are related. ^^;

#2

That perfectionism is the standard. Things aren’t worth doing unless you do them so thoroughly and perfectly that you basically are never done editing. helllllloooooo burnout

Image credits: trialanderror13

#3

That you must have a “valid” reason for everything you do. “Because I want to” or “because it makes me happy” are not valid reasons.

#4

That you will drown and die if you swim after you eat.

Image credits: orneryoneesan

#5

Make sure to tell your boss that you want to work all the weekends, evenings and holidays so that they know you really care about your job.

Image credits: OverallContest6485

#6

Purity culture

Image credits: 3720-To-One

#7

I was told, over and over, “Just wait until you are a parent!! Then you will understand!!” Now I’m a parent and have fully concluded they were just trying to mask their insecurities with gaslighting.

Image credits: Additional-Sky-7436

#8

Being a member of the clean plate club is not the badge of honor I was told it was

Image credits: KirdyB

#9

That EMTs care about your bra and underwear matching.

Image credits: WandaDobby777

#10

“Washing your hands in the kitchen sink is bad luck.” They told me it was from the old country and I didn’t learn it was a lie until a few months ago. I told my girlfriend that and she texted my mom to ask if it was true. My mom responded “I just said that to keep them out of the kitchen. Men are so easy to trick!”

#11

That using public safety net programs made you a bad person. Food stamps, WIC, and Medicaid were for people that were completely morally bankrupt and would never make anything of themselves.

Image credits: Imaginary_Train_8056

#12

Mental health isn’t real.

Image credits: MrKBC

#13

Calling everyday when you apply for a job, totally horses**t but I f****n did it for like 5 years after leaving home. Anything concerning work culture honestly

Image credits: Fantastic_Art_5663

#14

KISS Stood For Knights In Satan’s Service and they were a band of devil worshipers

#15

– Sitting too close to the TV will hurt your eyes and you’ll need glasses because of it.

– IDK if this is my parents, but other adults said coffee stunts your growth which is b******t.

Image credits: Wallflower_in_PDX

#16

You must conform and appear “normal”, otherwise someone might judge you as “weird” and that’s just the worst thing that could possibly happen .

Image credits: brilliantpants

#17

Someone’s salary reflects both their intelligence and worth as a person, eg the higher salary the a smarter, better person

Image credits: VogTheViscous

#18

That I don’t need to learn to cook or do laundry because “my wife will do that stuff when I get married”. I went off to college having no clue how to do laundry and I didn’t learn how to do the most basic of cooking until my 20s. My three year old literally helps with laundry and cooking more than I ever got to do my 18 years of living at home.

Image credits: anon

#19

Destroying documents. I cant just shred them, i have to run them under water, cover them with soap, and put them in 3 separate garbage cans. Thanks dad.

Image credits: NYTX1987

#20

– Not everything has to devolve into a screaming argument

– Never calling off work is stupid and only hurts yourself

– You don’t need to keep your car full of gas during the winter because it has a freezing point of -100

Image credits: mydogsnameiskendrick

#21

College = success/money.

Haaaaaaa!!!

Image credits: rockinem192

#22

Men don’t feel emotions ?

Image credits: SereneGiraffe

#23

Mostly over exaggerating how afraid I should be of things. Getting cut by broken glass is not nearly as bad as the anxiety response around trying not to break a glass in the first place. I was always taught fear as a precautionary ritual and never from a place of practical understanding. That’s how you raise a child with crippling self confidence issues.

Image credits: Riccma02

#24

That thing where they’re like “respect is given, not earned.” Biggest horses**t I’ve ever heard.

Image credits: Dracasethaen

#25

Gendered chores. My husband and I do not observe those rules

#26

That everyone is always judging you. They are very insecure people (and so am I but trying to fix it lol).

#27

A ten hour car ride with only one bathroom break

Image credits: Pawsacrossamerica

#28

Saving the best for last.
Whether it’s beer, food, or a nice soap someone gave as a gift.
My mom would hoard them until they were ancient and no longer in fresh enough condition to enjoy properly. Now I have the best thing first and enjoy it to its fullest potential.

#29

If you sleep with a fan on in the room, you risk suffocating and dying in your sleep.

Image credits: Ok-Parfait-4869

#30

My parents told me pepperoni was a vegetable because I wouldn’t eat meat. 34 and still a vegetarian…. TAKE THAT!

#31

“Work hard and you will be rewarded.” And I somehow continued to believe that c**p long after they themselves established a pattern of never rewarding my hard work, while harshly punishing my failures.

In their defense, they’ve come around to understand both the double-standard they applied to me and the inherent b******t of the saying itself.

Image credits: N_Who

#32

That I was allergic to sugar. My mother isn’t exactly a stable person. I had a rough childhood. One of the delusions was that I was allergic to sugar. It’s not a thing.

Image credits: tadams2tone

#33

being called ‘mature for my age’ / ‘old soul’ was not a gold star, it was because I had no personality other than gaining the approval of parental figures. I always existed for other people, grew up way too fast, and set impossible standards for myself. My late twenties have been fun as I try to figure out who the hell I am now.

Image credits: thenorussian

#34

The mystical “permanent record” lie.

If I got a detention, speeding ticket, any sort of ticket actually, it’d go on my permanent record and I’d never get into college or get a good job.
It was the blanket fear approach instead of using truthful, realistic consequences for those situations.

Image credits: OSimplySimps

#35

My parents engrained in me that I absolutely cannot waste food. So, I have a psychological obsession with eating everything from my plate, even if I was already full. Now, when my children didn’t finish their plates, I’d have the urge to finish for them instead of throwing the leftovers away.

It’s really unhealthy, literally.

#36

That you always need to scrimp and save instead of splurging a little sometimes to enjoy life

Image credits: vestinpeace

#37

“Therapists just find ways to blame the parents”

Image credits: Rough_Elk_3952

#38

Job loyalty. If you work hard, you’ll get promoted!

#39

My dad convinced me that “unions suck”, either because “dues” or “lazy workers” or “they’re all left wing”

Then I got into a union, and the monthly dues are a drop in the bucket compared to my old non-union wages, the wages are high enough that everyone is happy to bust a*s if it’s ever actually necessary or beneficial to bust a*s, and the group is generally pretty politically diverse.

Union elections matter as much as actual elections once you’re in one. I’m far more concerned about who my union stewards and BAs are than actual politicians.

Image credits: Hahayayo

#40

“Just stop worrying and be happy.” Idk if that actually works for my parents but it is way more complicated than that

#41

That every piece of clothing you buy should be something you can wear to work.

#42

That it’s wrong to celebrate Halloween (I could hand out candy to other kids, but wasn’t allowed to participate in it myself).

#43

That I should take out as many student loans as I want because I don’t have to pay them back until I’m making good money, and that when I do pay them back I can make tiny payments until I die.

What the f**k, mom.

#44

That I don’t have any worth unless I’m doing for others or doing well, working, which makes it where when I’m sick or want a day off I feel guilty and like I’m never enough.

#45

That A1 sauce was extremely valuable and only to be used for special occasions and, even then, sparingly.

It wasn’t until I was in my mid 30s and finally got a house and grill of my own that I realized they made that rule because we were extremely poor while I was growing up, not that A1 was anything special.

#46

Barely using heat in winter and A/C in summer. Those are NOT the places to save money. Save elsewhere on stupid discretionary spend.

#47

It’s never ok to buy packaged salads, pre-cut fruits and veggies, or convenience foods because they are costly and wasteful. Sometimes as an adult I splurge on these things now because it’s literally the easiest way to get all the servings of fruit and veggies I need. I don’t always have time to prep all of those things. I’ll literally serve some protein and a bagged salad for dinner. My dad would clutch his pearls at that. Is it any shock that I rarely ate fresh food as a child?

#48

That adults are smarter.

#49

That some places will hire me because of my excellent attendance records in school. And if I actually work hard at a job they’ll recognize that and reward you

#50

You must only say BM (bowel movement) and never poo or poop. What a s**t rule.

#51

“Honesty is the best policy” is really only true when it comes to your spouse and close family.

Reality is that honesty has gotten me in more trouble with authorities than just keeping my mouth shut.

#52

My parents told me if you slept with the blanket over your head you’d get “turtle disease”. Looking back, I don’t think that is true…

Also they said kiwis were gorilla eggs… which many people don’t know…

#53

If you go to school for something you really like (in my case art/graphic design) you’ll be a failure and never amount to anything.

I was completely burnt out after high school because I’d been doing all AP classes, extracurricular activities many of which I had to walk home from, while dealing with abuse. I went to community college for about a semester before dropping out. I never completed my degree and work in customer service. I should have just done the art thing because even I got a “useless” art degree I’d be more or less in the same situation I am now, but at least I wouldn’t have wasted 4.5 years of my life studying for AP exams and walking 2 miles from from school after Scientific Olympiad.

#54

Doing good in elementary school leads to anything in the future.

#55

“I’m the adult, and I don’t have to explain myself to you. Btw. Meet your new step-dad.” – True story.

Goes out adulting for the first time. Yeah. You kind of needed to.

Stop raising kids, and start raising adults.

#56

That you have to give 2 week’s notice when quitting a job.

#57

you have to get married or do this and that by “this age”…life is not a straight line and s**t happens

#58

Oh there are too many things to list here.

“Don’t talk over others, it’s rude.” while talking over me constantly.

That buying things is a reward for “doing good things.” which has lead to… Issues now with bills. “Well, I could pay all these, but… Damn I’ve been depressed and this thing would cheer me up… Oh well, the hill can wait!”

Polite behavior that no one else has ever heard of.

The list goes on.

#59

Respect your elders.

A lot of old people are s**t.

#60

Work hard and you’ll be rewarded.

Yeah, to some extent, hard work is rewarded. But there’s a point where there’s no amount of effort you could put in that would make you as much money as unionizing your workplace and taking part in the union politics that make that union effective.

In my industry they wanted us to work 40% harder than 1991 workers to make the same buying power.

Consider that for a moment. Right out of school. Expected to do 40% more than workers of years gone by just to have a comparable lifestyle.

“Work hard” just got me taken advantage of. And you know what? I still believe in working hard and doing a good job.

But wise up and realize that there’s no shortage of businesspeople ready to put you to work for less than you’re worth.

#61

I still feel the urge to go home when the street lights come on.

#62

That big cities are scary and dangerous. Maybe it was slightly more true in their era

I grew up 5 hours away from Chicago and didn’t visit until I was 32. I’m desperately trying to get them to check it out, but they refuse. I’ve been to plenty of other cities since I was in my mid 20s but seeing Chicago for the first time was surreal

#63

If you go outside or talk to someone online, you will be instantly k****d

#64

That the beatings she doled out as discipline always hurt her more than how she had hurt us.

#65

Steak has to be cooked until it has the appearance and consistency of shoe leather. Once I was old enough to order my own steak at restaurants (or cook my own steaks at home), it was exclusively medium rare for me.

#66

Catholicism.

And it doesn’t matter what you major in at college, you’ll be able to get a good job. Maybe it was true in the 70’s but now no one respects a degree in the humanities.

#67

Saving everything. My dad was a collector and my mom saved EVERYTHING. My dad died when I was a kid and I’m glad he was a collector because we made enough to pay off the house by selling his comics and baseball cards, but my lord… No, Mom. I don’t want my high chair for my kids who are now too old for a high chair. Nor do I want Dad’s blanket from military school. Thanks. Why do you still have those things?!

#68

That holding more than 3-5 jobs in a lifetime was a sign of my incompetency, not the changing nature of the economy.

#69

If I (29m) concentrated and worked hard I would get good grades in school. Last year I was diagnosed Autistic.

#70

My dad had a*s hole humor. Like being a jerk is funny. I was an innocent a*s hole to people for a long time. My boyfriend in college would point it out and I was like “what are you talking about?” And it was literally the only thing that straightened me out.

My dad came from an abusive home as a child and as recently cooled his jets in his older age. I think he was unaware and his mom came from an extremely abusive household. Like- she had red hair and they sent her to a farm away from the family and beat her all the time. The other siblings got to live at home.

My college boyfriend came from an abusive household just like me (his dad was an alcoholic, my mom was an alcoholic) so we kinda understood each other and called out each other’s a*s hole-ness all the time.

My husband and I have also worked on it. My husband came from a religious family who shamed as a form of punishment, also pretty abusive. It’s taken years, therapy, and many books, but I think it’s over.

Coming from a tough family takes so long to realize “hey, that’s not normal. That’s being an a*s hole. No wonder I have no friends!” We’ll be raising our son with kindness and not being AHs.

Also, Reddit. I think getting dunked on by you guys all the time made me realize how much of an AH I was too. It hurts, but it’s needed.

Generational trauma! So fun!

Image credits: Ihavesomethingtosay9

#71

“You can be anything you want in life”

“I want to be an artist.”

“Anything except that. You won’t be able to pay your bills.”

#72

Drinking a cup of juice was healthy because it was a serving of fruit.

#73

Other people’s perception of you was always more important than what you wanted or how you expressed yourself. My grandparents pushed that a lot so I understand where it came from, but once I got older I realized how damaging it was.

#74

The American dream, being happy, going to college. Do what you love and never work in a day.

#75

That it’s never ok to ask for help.

#76

just everything. My entire personality is ruined because of her. I don’t even know who I am

#77

Illegal drugs are really bad, but if you get them from your doctor, no problem!

#78

1. That being hit/screamed at means someone loves me

2.having a grade below a B in high school meant I’d be working at McDonald’s all my life

#79

If I took more than one Flintstone vitamin I would get really sick.

#80

Separating lights and darks for laundry ?

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